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Importance Of Knowledge In Fahrenheit 451

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Importance Of Knowledge In Fahrenheit 451
In Fahrenheit 451, Bradbury explores how a lack of knowledge can serve as a source of evil. To begin with, the dangers of suppression of ideas are starkly represented when a woman dies at the hands of firefighters order to protect her books. “‘You can’t ever have my books,’ she said. ‘You know the law,’ said Beatty. ‘Where’s your common sense? None of those books agree with each other… Snap out of it! The people in those books never lived.” (35)
In this quote, Captain Beatty demands that the woman who is trapped in with the books to leave the house. When she refuses, he threatens her to be burned along with the house. The culture of Fahrenheit 451 functions as a bureaucracy, and as a result, people in power see individuals as disposable.

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